The story spread. Other industries—pharmaceuticals, logistics, even a school for deaf and mute children—adopted Ninthware Touch. Because the solution wasn’t about more data. It was about making data touchable , immediate, and human.
Every day, supervisors juggled clipboards, spreadsheets, and phone calls. A machine in Section C would overheat, but the maintenance log was in a binder two floors up. Inventory checks required three people and four hours. By the time a problem was identified, the line had already stalled, costing the company lakhs of rupees per hour.
She introduced him to .
That’s when a young tech consultant, Priya, walked in. She didn’t brandish a thick proposal. She held a single rugged tablet.
In week three, the inventory team reduced their count time from four hours to 45 minutes. A trainee, new to the floor, learned the entire material flow in a day—because the interface spoke the universal language of touch and sight, not manuals.
Unlike traditional software, Ninthware Touch wasn’t designed for an office. It was designed for the factory floor. Its interface was built around —swipe for shift reports, tap for machine status, pinch to zoom into real-time sensor data. No keyboards. No mouse. Just human touch.
By month six, Kovai Weaves & Tech had increased overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) by 34%. Mr. Senthil no longer paced the floor at night. He sat in his office, watching a clean dashboard update in real time, every touch on the factory floor creating a ripple of clarity upstairs.
Where complexity meets a single fingertip.
The owner, Mr. Senthil, had tried everything: generic ERP software, off-the-shelf inventory apps, even a custom desktop solution. None worked. They were too rigid, too slow, or required a Wi-Fi backbone his sprawling, steel-walled factory couldn’t support. He needed something that touched the problem directly—without layers of complexity.